Home » Currently Reading:

Editors Notes

CUTE! Something to think about… Look into Who started income tax and upon what authority.

I agree and think a lot like Paul Hellyer. Thank you Paul!

(SEE THE ARTICLE BELOW) We are running out of time!

To me, this is a crime and a sin. No one on this planet should be allowed to damage this planet and enviourment like this. It stamps on the rights of us all as Planetary inhabitants. This has to be stopped now!

Please read below. We must stop this insanity, this theft and abuse of our planet and resources.

H. Eugene Sr. Editor Bettertheworld.org

Oceans’ acidic shift may be fastest in 300 million years

ReutersBy Deborah Zabarenko | Reuters – 23 hrs ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The world’s oceans are turning acidic at what could be the fastest pace of any time in the past 300 million years, even more rapidly than during a monster emission of planet-warming carbon 56 million years ago, scientists said on Thursday.

Looking back at that bygone warm period in Earth’s history could offer help in forecasting the impact of human-spurred climate change, researchers said of a review of hundreds of studies of ancient climate records published in the journal Science.

Quickly acidifying seawater eats away at coral reefs, which provide habitat for other animals and plants, and makes it harder for mussels and oysters to form protective shells. It can also interfere with small organisms that feed commercial fish like salmon.

The phenomenon has been a top concern of Jane Lubchenco, the head of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, who has conducted demonstrations aboutacidification during hearings in the U.S. Congress.

Oceans get more acidic when more carbon gets into the atmosphere. In pre-industrial times, that occurred periodically in natural pulses of carbon that also pushed up global temperatures, the scientists wrote.

Human activities, including the burning of fossil fuels, have increased the level of atmospheric carbon to 392 parts per million from about 280 parts per million at the start of the industrial revolution. Carbon dioxide is one of several heat-trapping gases that contribute to global warming.

To figure out what ocean acidification might have done in the prehistoric past, 21 researchers from the United States, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Germany and Spain reviewed studies of the geological record going back 300 million years, looking for signs of climate disruption.

Those indications of climate change included mass extinction events, where substantial percentages of living things on Earth died off, such as the giant asteroid strike thought to have killed the dinosaurs some 65 million years ago.

The events that seemed similar to what is happening now included mass extinctions about 252 million and 201 million years ago, as well as the warming period 56 million years in the past.

The researchers reckoned the 5,000-year hot spell 56 million years ago, likely due to factors like massive volcanism, was the closest parallel to current conditions at any time in the 300 million years.

To detect that, they looked at a layer of brown mud buried under the Southern Ocean off Antarctica. Sandwiched between layers of white plankton fossils, the brown mud indicated an ocean so acidic that the plankton fossils from that particular 5,000-year period dissolved into muck.

During that span, the amount of carbon in the atmosphere doubled and average temperatures rose by 10.8 degrees F (6 degrees C), the researchers said. The oceans became more acidic by about 0.4 unit on the 14-point pH scale over that 5,000-year period, the researchers said.

That is a fast warm-up and a quick acidification, but it is small compared with what has happened on Earth since the start of the industrial revolution some 150 years ago, study author Baerbel Hoenischof Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory said by telephone.

EXTINCTIONS ON THE SEAFLOOR

During the warming period 56 million years ago, known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, or PETM, and occurring about 9 million years after the extinction of the dinosaurs, acidification for each century was about .008 unit on the pH scale, Hoenisch said.

Back then, many corals went extinct, as did many types of single-celled organisms that lived on the sea floor, which suggests other plants and animals higher on the food chain died out too, researchers said.

By contrast, in the 20th century, oceans acidified by .1 unit of pH, and are projected to get more acidic at the rate of .2 or .3 pH by the year 2100, according to the study.

The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects world temperatures could rise by 3.2 to 7 degrees F (1.8 to 4 degrees C) this century.

“Given that the rate of change was an order of magnitude smaller (in the PETM) compared to what we’re doing today, and still there were these big ecosystem changes, that gives us concern for what is going to happen in the future,” Hoenisch said.

Those skeptical of human-caused climate change often point to past warming periods caused by natural events as evidence that the current warming trend is not a result of human activities. Hoenisch noted that natural causes such as massive volcanism were probably responsible for the PETM.

She said, however, that the rate of warming and acidification was much more gradual then, over the course of five millennia compared with one century.

Richard Feely, an oceanographer at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who was not involved in the study, said looking at that distant past was a good way to foresee the future.

“These studies give you a sense of the timing involved in past ocean acidification events – they did not happen quickly,” Feely said in a statement. “The decisions we make over the next few decades could have significant implications on a geologic timescale.”

RSS Enough Project

  • 5 Stories You May Have Missed This Week May 17, 2013
    Here at Enough, we often swap emails with interesting articles and feature stories that we come across in our favorite publications and on our favorite websites. We wanted to share some of these stories with you as part of our effort to keep you up to date on what you need to know in the world of anti-genocide and crimes against humanity work. Enough Project […]

RSS Look To The Stars News: Ben Affleck's Charity

  • Vanessa Hudgens To Lead The Electric Run For Smile Train
  • RSS ONE » What We’re Reading

    • What We’re Reading: Secretary Kerry makes case for foreign aid February 21, 2013
      The Telegraph: John Kerry threatens to bore the world to death with excruciating first speech as Secretary of State – Former Senator John Kerry’s first speech as Secretary of State was delivered at the University of Virginia and has already been dubbed “one of the dullest lectures on record by a senior U.S. official.” Kerry […]

    RSS Gibson Foundation News

    • Gibson Custom 20th Anniversary 1957 Les Paul Custom Black Beauty May 16, 2013
      Gibson Custom has selected an extremely appropriate guitar with which to begin the celebrations of the 20th Anniversary of its Historic Reissue series. The 1957 Les Paul Custom is often considered the epitome of the “Black Beauty,” the first of the elegant Customs to carry the new PAF humbucking pickups. To kick off a very limited edition series of three 20t […]

    RSS RaisingMalawi.org

    • Grantee Profile: Dr. Eric Borgstein April 22, 2013
      Since 2006, Raising Malawi has remained committed to supporting organizations and individuals who fight tirelessly to help the estimated 1 million orphans, vulnerable children, and their families and communities in Malawi. This support includes providing critical medical care to children through community-based clinics and hospitals. Photo: Dr. Eric Borgstei […]

    RSS CNN HEROES

    • Abducted by pirates for $45 million ransom May 17, 2013
      American aid worker Jessica Buchanan was held captive in the Somali desert for 93 days. She describes her dramatic rescue to Anderson Cooper. […]
    • RidicuList: Tweet Pee May 17, 2013
      Can't seem to remember to change your baby's diapers? That's what social media is for. […]
    • Texas man finds dog after tornado May 17, 2013
      CNN's Randi Kaye has the story of a Texas man who lost his home, but found his best friend after the deadly tornadoes. Jerry Shuttlesworth was reunited with his 6-year-old pit bull, Junior, on Friday. […]

    RSS NBC: WorldBlog

    • China warns against troublemaking on Korean Peninsula April 7, 2013
      BEIJING/SEOUL — China on Sunday warned against "troublemaking" on its doorstep, in an apparent rebuke to North Korea. The North, led by 30-year-old Kim Jong-un, has been issuing vitriolic threats of war against the United States and U.S.-backed South Korea since the Unit … […]
    • 'Marmageddon' is over! New Zealand rejoices over return of Marmite spread March 21, 2013
      New Zealand's sticky black sandwich spread is finally back on breakfast tables after fans suffered through a year of what they dramatically described as “Marmageddon.” Supermarkets began selling Marmite again Wednesday for the first time since March 2012, when suppli … […]
    • Report: Chinese army tied to widespread US hacking February 19, 2013
      BEIJING – A group of hackers linked to the Chinese military has stolen reams of sensitive data from more than 100 prominent American companies and organizations, according to an explosive new report. “The details we have analyzed during hundreds of investigations con … […]

    RSS ABC World News: Person of the Week

    RSS CBS: WORLDWATCH BLOG